Margo Price continues to embark on her own evolution with Strays II, an extension of her original 2023 opus with nine new songs that will arrive in the form of three distinct acts.
The Nashville singer-songwriter announced that the double album will arrive on Oct. 13, and shared Act I: Topanga Canyon on Monday at midnight. Each act is billed as “its own unique story of love, grief and acceptance.” On the first offering, a trio of songs, she’s joined by Strays producer Jonathan Wilson (Father John Misty, Dawes), as well...
The Nashville singer-songwriter announced that the double album will arrive on Oct. 13, and shared Act I: Topanga Canyon on Monday at midnight. Each act is billed as “its own unique story of love, grief and acceptance.” On the first offering, a trio of songs, she’s joined by Strays producer Jonathan Wilson (Father John Misty, Dawes), as well...
- 8/22/2023
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com
The First Lady of Outlaw Country has returned.
In an exclusive premiere with Rolling Stone on Wednesday, Jessi Colter debuted her first new single in six years, “Standing on the Edge of Forever.” The song opens her new album, Edge of Forever, the next chapter of her storied career, out Oct. 27 on Appalachia Record Co.
The 10-track collection is the long-awaited follow up to 2017’s Lenny Kaye-produced The Psalms. “It was really sheer enjoyment for me to be able to do, because I really hadn’t planned anything much further,...
In an exclusive premiere with Rolling Stone on Wednesday, Jessi Colter debuted her first new single in six years, “Standing on the Edge of Forever.” The song opens her new album, Edge of Forever, the next chapter of her storied career, out Oct. 27 on Appalachia Record Co.
The 10-track collection is the long-awaited follow up to 2017’s Lenny Kaye-produced The Psalms. “It was really sheer enjoyment for me to be able to do, because I really hadn’t planned anything much further,...
- 8/16/2023
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com
Lucinda Williams has shared a music video for her recent single, “Rock N Roll Heart.” The black and white clip marks the first time in over three decades that Williams has starred in one of her videos, following 1988’s “Passionate Kisses.”
Directed by Neilson Hubbard and Joshua Britt, the video sees Williams singing the poignant lyrics as two young kids play along on instruments, dance around a loft space, and graffiti a nearby street.
“Rock n Roll Heart” comes off Williams’ recent LP, Stories from a Rock N Roll Heart,...
Directed by Neilson Hubbard and Joshua Britt, the video sees Williams singing the poignant lyrics as two young kids play along on instruments, dance around a loft space, and graffiti a nearby street.
“Rock n Roll Heart” comes off Williams’ recent LP, Stories from a Rock N Roll Heart,...
- 8/9/2023
- by Emily Zemler
- Rollingstone.com
Lucinda Williams has announced the dates of her “Don’t Tell Anybody the Secrets” tour his fall. The headlining tour will be in support of her 15th studio album, Stories from a Rock n Roll Heart, which was released last month.
The tour will include 15 stops across the Midwest and East Coast, with Williams kicking things off at the historic Ryman Auditorium in Nashville on Oct. 7. The legendary singer-songwriter will be making stops in St. Louis, Kansas City, Toronto, Boston, and New York City before the final show in Red Bank,...
The tour will include 15 stops across the Midwest and East Coast, with Williams kicking things off at the historic Ryman Auditorium in Nashville on Oct. 7. The legendary singer-songwriter will be making stops in St. Louis, Kansas City, Toronto, Boston, and New York City before the final show in Red Bank,...
- 7/19/2023
- by Charisma Madarang
- Rollingstone.com
Lucinda Williams has mapped out a run of Fall 2023 tour dates in support of her latest album, Stories from a Rock n Roll Heart.
The “Don’t Tell Anybody the Secrets” tour is described as a multimedia experience in which Williams will both perform songs from throughout her discography and share stories and anecdotes with the audience. It kicks off on October 7th in Nashville and will make subsequent stops in St. Louis, Kansas City, Chicago, Toronto, Boston, and New York City before wrapping up in Red Bank, New Jersey on October 29th. See her full touring schedule below, and grab tickets here.
Ahead of the fall tour, Williams has a residency at a Minneapolis jazz club, a handful of co-headlining dates with Big Thief, and her own headlining show in Los Angeles. She’s scheduled to head out to Europe and the UK in support of the album early next year.
The “Don’t Tell Anybody the Secrets” tour is described as a multimedia experience in which Williams will both perform songs from throughout her discography and share stories and anecdotes with the audience. It kicks off on October 7th in Nashville and will make subsequent stops in St. Louis, Kansas City, Chicago, Toronto, Boston, and New York City before wrapping up in Red Bank, New Jersey on October 29th. See her full touring schedule below, and grab tickets here.
Ahead of the fall tour, Williams has a residency at a Minneapolis jazz club, a handful of co-headlining dates with Big Thief, and her own headlining show in Los Angeles. She’s scheduled to head out to Europe and the UK in support of the album early next year.
- 7/18/2023
- by Eddie Fu
- Consequence - Music
It’s a wish-you-had-gills type of humid September day in Nashville, but Lucinda Williams is comfortably out of the soup, sitting at the kitchen table of Ray Kennedy’s Room & Board Studio telling tales about life on the road to a gang of touring lifers including Tommy Stinson and Jesse Malin. They’re rare, behind-the-curtain anecdotes, many of which she shares in her superb memoir, Don’t Tell Anybody the Secrets I Told You. But in person, hearing them delivered in Williams’ syrupy Southern drawl, they’re especially captivating.
Soon,...
Soon,...
- 7/1/2023
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
Margo Price and Charley Crockett were among the top nominees when the Americana Music Association announced the nominations for the 2023 Americana Honors & Awards on Tuesday via Twitter.
Price and Crockett are both up for Artist of the Year, Album of the Year, and Song of the Year. For Price, that’d her LP Strays and its song “Change of Heart”; for Crockett, it’s The Man from Waco and the song “I’m Just a Clown.” Both will compete for Artist of the Year with Sierra Ferrell, Allison Russell, and Billy Strings,...
Price and Crockett are both up for Artist of the Year, Album of the Year, and Song of the Year. For Price, that’d her LP Strays and its song “Change of Heart”; for Crockett, it’s The Man from Waco and the song “I’m Just a Clown.” Both will compete for Artist of the Year with Sierra Ferrell, Allison Russell, and Billy Strings,...
- 5/9/2023
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
Lucinda Williams has announced she is returning with a new album titled Stories from a Rock n Roll Heart, out June 30th via Highway 20 Records/Thirty Tigers. As a preview, the country icon has teamed up with Bruce Springsteen for the first single, “New York Comeback.”
Stories from a Rock n Roll Heart was recorded while Williams was recovering from a stroke she suffered a few years back. At the time, she wasn’t able to write songs using her guitar and continued collaborating with her husband/manager Tom Overby while also bringing in singer-songwriter Jessie Malin to co-write three tracks and flesh out melodies. Williams’ longtime road manager, Travis Stephens, also co-wrote six songs on the album.
Produced by Williams, Overby and Ray Kennedy, Stories from a Rock n Roll Heart features backing vocals from Bruce Springsteen, Margo Price, Angel Olsen, Tommy Stinson, Jeremy Ivey, and more.
Springsteen and...
Stories from a Rock n Roll Heart was recorded while Williams was recovering from a stroke she suffered a few years back. At the time, she wasn’t able to write songs using her guitar and continued collaborating with her husband/manager Tom Overby while also bringing in singer-songwriter Jessie Malin to co-write three tracks and flesh out melodies. Williams’ longtime road manager, Travis Stephens, also co-wrote six songs on the album.
Produced by Williams, Overby and Ray Kennedy, Stories from a Rock n Roll Heart features backing vocals from Bruce Springsteen, Margo Price, Angel Olsen, Tommy Stinson, Jeremy Ivey, and more.
Springsteen and...
- 4/4/2023
- by Eddie Fu
- Consequence - Music
Lucinda Williams will welcome this summer with a new album. The revered singer-songwriter’s latest, titled Stories From a Rock n Roll Heart, will arrive June 30 and includes guest appearances by a number of other songwriting luminaries, including Bruce Springsteen, Angel Olsen, and Tommy Stinson. It follows her 2020 release, Good Souls Better Angels.
First up from the album is “New York Comeback,” on which Springsteen and Patty Scialfa add their background vocals to Williams’ melodies. A straightforward rock tune with driving electric guitar and splashes of Hammond organ, it features...
First up from the album is “New York Comeback,” on which Springsteen and Patty Scialfa add their background vocals to Williams’ melodies. A straightforward rock tune with driving electric guitar and splashes of Hammond organ, it features...
- 4/4/2023
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
Margo Price has reinterpreted her Strays track “Change of Heart,” which originally had sort of a Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers gone country vibe, as a sparsely adorned acoustic song. The song now has a dusky, campfire feel, as she and country artist Sierra Ferrell slow it down and plumb new emotional depths in the lyrics. Price’s husband, Jeremy Ivey (who also cowrote the song), plays guitar on the tune while Billy Contreras plays fiddle.
“I’m real excited to share this stripped down take on ‘Change of Heart’ featuring Sierra Ferrell,...
“I’m real excited to share this stripped down take on ‘Change of Heart’ featuring Sierra Ferrell,...
- 3/16/2023
- by Kory Grow
- Rollingstone.com
Two years ago, while tripping on mushrooms, Margo Price decided to quit drinking. This wasn’t her first attempt, but something about her psychedelic journey led her to an epiphany. “I know it sounds a little woo-woo, but I was touched by something,” says Price, 39. “I thought about fucking everything that had happened in my life up until that point, and I didn’t know what was holding me back from quitting.”
With this newfound perspective, Price finished her excellent memoir, Maybe We’ll Make It. The book focuses on...
With this newfound perspective, Price finished her excellent memoir, Maybe We’ll Make It. The book focuses on...
- 1/3/2023
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
Margo Price will release her next album at the top of 2023. The singer-songwriter and performer has announced that Strays, her fourth studio full-length, will arrive Jan. 13 via Loma Vista Records and includes appearances by Sharon Van Etten and the Heartbreakers’ Mike Campbell. The project follows Price’s 2020 album That’s How Rumors Get Started.
Price previously released the album’s first single, “Been to the Mountain,” in August. Along with the announcement of Strays, Price dropped the new song “Change of Heart” and its accompanying video. An intense, blues-influenced psych-rock tune,...
Price previously released the album’s first single, “Been to the Mountain,” in August. Along with the announcement of Strays, Price dropped the new song “Change of Heart” and its accompanying video. An intense, blues-influenced psych-rock tune,...
- 9/20/2022
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
Margo Price will make her literary debut in 2022 with the publication of her first book. Titled Maybe We’ll Make It: A Memoir, the volume will be released via the University of Texas Press on Oct. 4.
Price has frequently written about her life in song, tackling her rocky journey to Nashville, motherhood, and grief across her three solo albums Midwest Farmer’s Daughter, All American Made, and That’s How Rumors Get Started. Maybe We’ll Make It will expound on those stories and shed light on where she finds herself in the present moment.
Price has frequently written about her life in song, tackling her rocky journey to Nashville, motherhood, and grief across her three solo albums Midwest Farmer’s Daughter, All American Made, and That’s How Rumors Get Started. Maybe We’ll Make It will expound on those stories and shed light on where she finds herself in the present moment.
- 2/10/2022
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
Musical spouses Jeremy Ivey and Margo Price are frequent collaborators on each other’s records, and their latest team effort “All Kinds of Blue” celebrates their affection for one another. The pair released the song on Tuesday and put out a live video to accompany it.
A road-worthy rock number sprinkled with bright blasts of harmonica, “All Kinds of Blue” plays up the pair’s musical appreciation for Tom Petty and John Prine while also taking a lighthearted, offbeat approach to finding and being in love. “I felt a spark...
A road-worthy rock number sprinkled with bright blasts of harmonica, “All Kinds of Blue” plays up the pair’s musical appreciation for Tom Petty and John Prine while also taking a lighthearted, offbeat approach to finding and being in love. “I felt a spark...
- 8/31/2021
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
Late last year, Margo Price released That’s How Rumors Get Started, where she steered her sound from outlaw country into full-on arena rock, inspired by Tom Petty and Fleetwood Mac. She recorded in L.A., putting together a band that included Benmont Tench of the Heartbreakers and bassist Pino Palladino. Price told Rolling Stone that she was nervous at first about working with those studio aces. “But once they all started playing,” she says, “it was one of the best ideas ever.”
While recording the album, producer Sturgill Simpson...
While recording the album, producer Sturgill Simpson...
- 1/25/2021
- by Patrick Doyle
- Rollingstone.com
Pearl Jam, David Byrne and Jenny Lewis are among the many artists featured on Good Music to Avert the Collapse of American Democracy: Volume Two. The collection will be available on Friday for 24 hours only as part of the Bandcamp Fridays series.
The tracklist is nearly twice the size of the first edition, with 77 previously unreleased recordings. Pearl Jam — who recently announced a massive voting initiative themselves — contributed the new song “Get It Back.” Byrne’s “People Tell Me” is a demo from the Joan of Arc: Into the Fire musical,...
The tracklist is nearly twice the size of the first edition, with 77 previously unreleased recordings. Pearl Jam — who recently announced a massive voting initiative themselves — contributed the new song “Get It Back.” Byrne’s “People Tell Me” is a demo from the Joan of Arc: Into the Fire musical,...
- 9/30/2020
- by Angie Martoccio
- Rollingstone.com
Singer-songwriter Jeremy Ivey braves downtown Nashville in a hazmat suit in the riotous new video for “Things Could Get Much Worse.” The song appears on Ivey’s upcoming album Waiting Out the Storm, which was produced by Ivey’s collaborator and wife, Margo Price.
Directed by Houston Mathews, the clip was shot in a single afternoon on a sunny summer day in Nashville. Ivey throws on a hazmat suit, complete with shoe coverings and latex gloves, then wrestles with brushing his teeth and drinking his coffee before heading out. On Lower Broadway,...
Directed by Houston Mathews, the clip was shot in a single afternoon on a sunny summer day in Nashville. Ivey throws on a hazmat suit, complete with shoe coverings and latex gloves, then wrestles with brushing his teeth and drinking his coffee before heading out. On Lower Broadway,...
- 9/9/2020
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
Last March at a benefit concert in Nashville, Margo Price comforted a crowd shell-shocked by a devastating tornado with a moving, solo performance of her song “I’d Die for You.” On Wednesday, Price released a similarly stripped-down version, which swaps out the guitar of the album track with piano and strings.
The original recording of “I’d Die for You” appears on Price’s latest LP, That’s How Rumors Get Started, as a swirling, almost psychedelic number. Here, stripped bare of any studio flourish, it’s a solemn prayer,...
The original recording of “I’d Die for You” appears on Price’s latest LP, That’s How Rumors Get Started, as a swirling, almost psychedelic number. Here, stripped bare of any studio flourish, it’s a solemn prayer,...
- 8/26/2020
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
Jeremy Ivey follows up his 2019 debut The Dream and the Dreamer with the new album Waiting Out the Storm. Due October 9th, it’s inspired by the glut of crises currently affecting the planet and arrives with the first single “Someone Else’s Problem.”
A Dylan-like stream of multiple verses about climate change, wrongfully detained immigrants, and racist authority figures, “Someone Else’s Problem” is an indictment of those who pass the buck. “So you drive your car to work and you watch the climate change/You think of all...
A Dylan-like stream of multiple verses about climate change, wrongfully detained immigrants, and racist authority figures, “Someone Else’s Problem” is an indictment of those who pass the buck. “So you drive your car to work and you watch the climate change/You think of all...
- 8/18/2020
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
Not too long ago, Margo Price was offered the chance to collaborate with a more famous artist. Some people around her thought it was a good idea, but Price wasn’t sure. “I love collaborating with people, but I’m not going to do it just because somebody’s famous,” she says. “I really have to admire their art.”
For Price, it was one of many key decisions she faced after the success of her first two albums, 2015’s Midwest Farmer’s Daughter and 2017’s All American Made. On those LPs,...
For Price, it was one of many key decisions she faced after the success of her first two albums, 2015’s Midwest Farmer’s Daughter and 2017’s All American Made. On those LPs,...
- 7/10/2020
- by Patrick Doyle
- Rollingstone.com
Margo Price performed three songs, including a cover of Bob Dylan’s “Things Have Changed,” and discussed her upcoming new album as part of CBS This Morning’s “Saturday Sessions.”
The socially distanced Price and her bandmates, who appeared to perform from their respective front porches and living rooms, also played the unreleased b-side “Drifter” and “Letting Me Down” from her new album That’s How Rumors Get Started, due out July 10th; the LP was originally scheduled for release in May, but was postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic.
The socially distanced Price and her bandmates, who appeared to perform from their respective front porches and living rooms, also played the unreleased b-side “Drifter” and “Letting Me Down” from her new album That’s How Rumors Get Started, due out July 10th; the LP was originally scheduled for release in May, but was postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic.
- 6/13/2020
- by Daniel Kreps
- Rollingstone.com
There’s a moment during Thursday’s superb tribute to John Prine in which Bill Murray holds up a framed photo of himself singing with Prine and the bluegrass band the SteelDrivers onstage at the Grand Ole Opry. “This is about as jazzed-up as I ever got,” he says, the joy tied to the memory apparent on his face. But when Murray, who’s wearing a pink floral shirt and sombrero, glances down at the photograph, he turns sad, suddenly aware that such magical, only-in-Prine’s-presence moments are now gone.
- 6/12/2020
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
Jason Isbell, Brandi Carlile, Eric Church, Kacey Musgraves, and Bill Murray will remember the life and music of John Prine during an all-star online special on Thursday. Picture Show: A Tribute Celebrating John Prine streams June 11th at 7:30 p.m. Et via Prine’s YouTube, Facebook, and Twitch.
Prine’s family, including his widow Fiona Whelan Prine, and his Oh Boy Records label produced the tribute, which assembles musical performances, first-person accounts of those who knew Prine, and unseen footage of the songwriter, who died in April after contracting Covid-19.
Along with Isbell,...
Prine’s family, including his widow Fiona Whelan Prine, and his Oh Boy Records label produced the tribute, which assembles musical performances, first-person accounts of those who knew Prine, and unseen footage of the songwriter, who died in April after contracting Covid-19.
Along with Isbell,...
- 6/8/2020
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
In the course of his 50-year career, John Prine influenced everyone from Bob Dylan to Bon Iver, Kacey Musgraves, Swamp Dogg, and others.
The influence of Prine, who died last week from complications related to Covid-19, is clear in the latest installment of our In My Room series. We asked some of our favorite artists (and some of Prine’s) to play one of his classics. They didn’t disappoint. Fellow Chicagoan Jeff Tweedy plays “Donald and Lydia,” the 1971 ballad Prine wrote on his mail route, about two people that “made love from 10 miles away.
The influence of Prine, who died last week from complications related to Covid-19, is clear in the latest installment of our In My Room series. We asked some of our favorite artists (and some of Prine’s) to play one of his classics. They didn’t disappoint. Fellow Chicagoan Jeff Tweedy plays “Donald and Lydia,” the 1971 ballad Prine wrote on his mail route, about two people that “made love from 10 miles away.
- 4/17/2020
- by Rolling Stone
- Rollingstone.com
Margo Price and Jeremy Ivey have been quarantined at their Nashville-area home raising their kids, drinking lots of coffee, and listening to Bob Dylan’s opus “Murder Most Foul” on repeat. But the husband-and-wife songwriters have also been playing music live, often huddled around the upright piano in their living room.
That’s where they gather for the latest installment of our “In My Room” video series to perform three songs, including a cover of John Prine’s “All the Best.” Price frequently shared the stage with the late songwriter and,...
That’s where they gather for the latest installment of our “In My Room” video series to perform three songs, including a cover of John Prine’s “All the Best.” Price frequently shared the stage with the late songwriter and,...
- 4/13/2020
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
On March 9th, Margo Price was performing at the To Nashville, With Love benefit concert, raising funds for a city shell-shocked by a deadly and devastating tornado. A little more than a day later, she was quarantining at home with her husband Jeremy Ivey and two children (including 11-month Ramona Lynn), sheltering in place as the coronavirus pandemic swept across Tennessee and the nation. With her new album That’s How Rumors Get Started delayed until the summer because of the crisis, Price has been finding ways to stay creative at home.
- 4/3/2020
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
Margo Price has postponed the release of her third studio album, That’s How Rumors Get Started, originally due May 8th. The Nashville singer-songwriter wrote on Instagram that “More realistically, it’s going to be this summer.”
Along with the ongoing coronavirus shutdown, Price cited the closure of vinyl-pressing plants and said she’ll be releasing singles in the interim. “Life is postponed until further notice. I would love nothing more than for everyone to hear my next album in its entirety but it’s just not gonna be May 8th,...
Along with the ongoing coronavirus shutdown, Price cited the closure of vinyl-pressing plants and said she’ll be releasing singles in the interim. “Life is postponed until further notice. I would love nothing more than for everyone to hear my next album in its entirety but it’s just not gonna be May 8th,...
- 3/27/2020
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
Margo Price and her husband Jeremy Ivey perform a three-song acoustic set from their home loft for NPR’s Tiny Desk Concert series, which has been newly rebranded as Tiny Desk (Home) Concert in the wake of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic that has forced musicians nationwide to cancel all live appearances.
Price and Ivey begin the set with “Stone Me,” the lead single from her upcoming album That’s How Rumors Get Started. “It’s been hard to keep everything I’ve been working on for the last year to myself,...
Price and Ivey begin the set with “Stone Me,” the lead single from her upcoming album That’s How Rumors Get Started. “It’s been hard to keep everything I’ve been working on for the last year to myself,...
- 3/26/2020
- by Jonathan Bernstein
- Rollingstone.com
The eighth annual Luck Reunion was supposed to draw around 4,000 people to Willie Nelson’s Texas ranch this week, with a lineup that included Nelson, Lucinda Williams, John Prine, Margo Price, Nathaniel Rateliff, and more. Those plans, of course, went out the window due to Covid-19.
Instead of canceling altogether, the small Luck Team — headed up by founders Matt Bizer and Ellee Fletcher — decided to get creative, reviving the festival as a livestream concert, with performers broadcasting from their homes for charity. The result was more impactful than any traditional festival could have been.
Instead of canceling altogether, the small Luck Team — headed up by founders Matt Bizer and Ellee Fletcher — decided to get creative, reviving the festival as a livestream concert, with performers broadcasting from their homes for charity. The result was more impactful than any traditional festival could have been.
- 3/20/2020
- by Patrick Doyle
- Rollingstone.com
With the coronavirus continuing to force artists to cancel or postpone tours and festivals, many have taken their shows to social media — livestreaming from the comforts of their homes and offering fans a glimpse of their lives. From Brian Wilson to Diplo, here are the best performances so far of the stay-at-home era. Click through and find something to pass all the hours you’ll have to spend inside for the good of yourself and others.
Neil Young
When Neil Young streamed a performance of the digital rally for Bernie Sanders earlier in the week,...
Neil Young
When Neil Young streamed a performance of the digital rally for Bernie Sanders earlier in the week,...
- 3/20/2020
- by Jonathan Bernstein, Jon Blistein, Patrick Doyle, Andy Greene, Joseph Hudak, Elias Leight, Angie Martoccio, Hank Shteamer, Brittany Spanos and Simon Vozick-Levinson
- Rollingstone.com
Lukas Nelson & Promise of the Real had a lot of touring lined up behind their new album Naked Garden (out March 27th), before our national emergency caused them to put those plans on hold. One of those shows was the Luck Reunion, a huge festival held at his dad Willie Nelson’s ranch that was supposed to take place on March 19th. Instead, Luck will be revived as a free livestream that will include Willie, Lukas and Micah Nelson, Jewel, Nathaniel Rateliff, Paul Simon and Edie Brickell, Lucinda Williams, Tre Burt,...
- 3/19/2020
- by Patrick Doyle
- Rollingstone.com
Following its cancellation alongside many other marquee spring events due to the spread of Covid-19, Luck Reunion will live on in 2020 as a virtual festival under the name “Til Further Notice” and featuring many of the performers originally slated to participate this year. The free livestream, filmed by many of the artists themselves, will take place Thursday, March 19th at 6 p.m. Ct.
Artists confirmed to perform include many familiar faces and a few first-timers, led as always by Willie Nelson and featuring appearances by Lukas Nelson, Micah Nelson, Jewel,...
Artists confirmed to perform include many familiar faces and a few first-timers, led as always by Willie Nelson and featuring appearances by Lukas Nelson, Micah Nelson, Jewel,...
- 3/18/2020
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
The 2020 edition of the Luck Reunion has announced its lineup. Lucinda Williams, Orville Peck, Margo Price, and perennial Luck headliner Willie Nelson are all set to perform at the daylong festival held on Nelson’s Luck Ranch outside of Austin.
Slated for March 19th, the Luck Reunion brings together left-of-center artists who are both preserving and progressing American music. Luck is also defined by frequent collaboration and a sense of intimacy, especially for the lucky few who pack the ranch’s “Chapel Stage.” This year, the Haden Triplets, Sierra Ferrell,...
Slated for March 19th, the Luck Reunion brings together left-of-center artists who are both preserving and progressing American music. Luck is also defined by frequent collaboration and a sense of intimacy, especially for the lucky few who pack the ranch’s “Chapel Stage.” This year, the Haden Triplets, Sierra Ferrell,...
- 2/14/2020
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
“Call me a bitch, then call me baby/you don’t know me, you don’t own me,” sings Margo Price in the chorus of “Stone Me,” her first new music in two years. The Nashville country and soul singer debuted the song with a live performance on Full Frontal With Samantha Bee.
Written by Price with husband and bandmate Jeremy Ivey, “Stone Me” finds Price shrugging off any slings and arrows that come her way. Attempt to sully her good name? Knock yourself out, she warns. “I won’t...
Written by Price with husband and bandmate Jeremy Ivey, “Stone Me” finds Price shrugging off any slings and arrows that come her way. Attempt to sully her good name? Knock yourself out, she warns. “I won’t...
- 1/16/2020
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
So, How Was Your Decade is a series in which the decade’s most innovative musicians answer our questionnaire about the music, culture and memorable moments that shaped their decade. We’ll be rolling these pieces out throughout December.
In 2014, a then-unsigned Margo Price headlined Rolling Stone Country’s new artist showcase at Nashville’s Exit/In. Two years later, she was signed to Jack White’s Third Man Records label, had released her debut album Midwest Farmer’s Daughter, and was about to perform on Saturday Night Live.
Put simply,...
In 2014, a then-unsigned Margo Price headlined Rolling Stone Country’s new artist showcase at Nashville’s Exit/In. Two years later, she was signed to Jack White’s Third Man Records label, had released her debut album Midwest Farmer’s Daughter, and was about to perform on Saturday Night Live.
Put simply,...
- 12/24/2019
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
We’re not exactly in Kentucky, but Kelsey Waldon’s Bluegrass State DNA is everywhere across the cozy log cabin she lives in with her boyfriend half an hour outside of Nashville — it’s that “DNA” that she sings about in “Kentucky, 1988,” Rolling Stone‘s best country song of the year.
You can see it as you approach from the gravel drive, via a black sign that reads “Ky Best” in block letters, hanging on the rust-colored shed. It’s in the camo jacket from her father’s hunting lodge,...
You can see it as you approach from the gravel drive, via a black sign that reads “Ky Best” in block letters, hanging on the rust-colored shed. It’s in the camo jacket from her father’s hunting lodge,...
- 12/23/2019
- by Marissa R. Moss
- Rollingstone.com
AmericanaFest grew to nearly South by Southwest proportions this year, with concerts seemingly going on all day long at venues, backyards, and parking lots across Nashville. Heavy hitters were everywhere, like Brandi Carlile, Tanya Tucker, and the Mavericks, who somehow shoehorned their big band onto two of Nashville’s tiniest stages: the Station Inn and Robert’s Western World. And rising artists, from Che Apalache to Marcus King Band, put in their time, playing gigs in the unrelenting heat of Tennessee’s late summer. Then there was Yola, the U.
- 9/16/2019
- by Jonathan Bernstein, Jon Freeman, Joseph Hudak and Marissa R. Moss
- Rollingstone.com
“There is a misconception about inspiration: that you’re inspired earlier and then run out of steam as you get older,” says Jeremy Ivey, who turned 41 in August and will release his first album as a solo artist on Friday. “I don’t feel that way at all. I feel like I’ve been learning how to write a song.”
Many of them, in fact. While his debut LP The Dream and the Dreamer — a nine-song collection of adventurous folk-rock — arrives this week, Ivey has a second album already recorded,...
Many of them, in fact. While his debut LP The Dream and the Dreamer — a nine-song collection of adventurous folk-rock — arrives this week, Ivey has a second album already recorded,...
- 9/11/2019
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
In mid-2018, Margo Price played a triumphant, sold-out three-night stand at Nashville’s Ryman Auditorium, proving her power as a capable headliner. She’s gone on to even bigger stages in 2019, opening several shows on Chris Stapleton’s All-American Road Show Tour in July and August. But on Saturday night, she found herself in the comparatively intimate setting of the Shoals Community Theater — with a capacity of around 700 seats — in downtown Florence, Alabama, as part of the 11th annual Billy Reid Shindig.
With a brief set that leaned heavily on...
With a brief set that leaned heavily on...
- 8/26/2019
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
Nashville singer-songwriter Jeremy Ivey is joined by his wife, performer Margo Price, to sing about the feeling of being between destinations in the new song “Greyhound.” The track appears on Ivey’s upcoming solo album The Dream and the Dreamer, which will be released September 13th.
Ivey cooks up a gentle country rhythm featuring fingerstyle acoustic guitar, woozy Dobro licks, and electric guitar accents, evoking Mutations-era Beck along with classic country. “Oh Greyhound, where’s my home today?/A pillow and a blanket, send me on my way,” Ivey sings,...
Ivey cooks up a gentle country rhythm featuring fingerstyle acoustic guitar, woozy Dobro licks, and electric guitar accents, evoking Mutations-era Beck along with classic country. “Oh Greyhound, where’s my home today?/A pillow and a blanket, send me on my way,” Ivey sings,...
- 8/14/2019
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
Nashville’s annual AmericanaFest has announced its final lineup of performers, a list that, like the Americana genre itself, represents roots-based country, folk, bluegrass, blues, and rock. Among the new additions: Shawn Colvin, Brent Cobb, Sarah Potenza, Andrew Bird, Drivin N Cryin, Nicki Bluhm, Andrew Combs, Sierra Hull, Foy Vance, the Quebe Sisters, Maggie Rose, Orville Peck, and Jesse Malin.
With 150 acts now added to the already stacked lineup, the Americana Music Association’s annual conference will feature some 500 performances from a total of almost 300 artists throughout the six-day event.
With 150 acts now added to the already stacked lineup, the Americana Music Association’s annual conference will feature some 500 performances from a total of almost 300 artists throughout the six-day event.
- 7/18/2019
- by Stephen L. Betts
- Rollingstone.com
Singer-songwriter Jeremy Ivey has announced plans for his new solo album The Dream and the Dreamer, due out September 13th via Anti Records. Familiar to many as sideman and husband to performer Margo Price, Ivey has also released a new video for “Diamonds Back to Coal.”
With jangling electric guitar crunch that’s equal parts Tom Petty and Neil Young , “Diamonds Back to Coal” is a bleak look at irreversible damage and oppression being felt in the current moment. “This is the land that we borrowed/this is the land...
With jangling electric guitar crunch that’s equal parts Tom Petty and Neil Young , “Diamonds Back to Coal” is a bleak look at irreversible damage and oppression being felt in the current moment. “This is the land that we borrowed/this is the land...
- 7/11/2019
- by Jon Freeman
- Rollingstone.com
Jeremy Ivey has long been one of Nashville’s most beloved behind-the-scenes musical magicians: as onetime member of Southern soul outfit Buffalo Clover; as a producer; occasional harmonica player in Margo Price’s band and her frequent songwriting partner (yes, they’re also married); and low-key solo artist. Later this year, Ivey will finally release his debut solo record, produced by Price, via Anti – Records, with the first single, “Story of a Fish,” debuting today.
Set to a bit of slowly chugging “She’s So Heavy”-era guitar, “Story of...
Set to a bit of slowly chugging “She’s So Heavy”-era guitar, “Story of...
- 6/12/2019
- by Marissa R. Moss
- Rollingstone.com
Jessi Colter, the first lady of the Outlaw Country movement, has a new album on the way, one that pairs her up with a contemporary country rebel in Margo Price. According to a series of tweets by the artists, Price spent a week in May in Nashville producing Colter’s latest project. The as-yet-untitled album is the follow-up to 2017’s The Psalms, a collection of stripped-down religious recordings that were produced by Lenny Kaye.
“I spent the entire past week producing an incredible new album for the Og Queen of ‘Outlaw’ Country,...
“I spent the entire past week producing an incredible new album for the Og Queen of ‘Outlaw’ Country,...
- 5/13/2019
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
For her debut appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live, Margo Price took a star turn with her song “Cocaine Cowboys,” stretching out the All American Made track into a seven-minute jam and taking a seat behind a second drum kit for an extended musical outro.
The country-funk track, a staple of Price’s live shows, pokes fun at the faux cowboys of the East Nashville scene who are preoccupied more with partying than performing. “They’re riding the rails right before the show,” Price sings in the lyrics, co-written with her husband Jeremy Ivey,...
The country-funk track, a staple of Price’s live shows, pokes fun at the faux cowboys of the East Nashville scene who are preoccupied more with partying than performing. “They’re riding the rails right before the show,” Price sings in the lyrics, co-written with her husband Jeremy Ivey,...
- 2/5/2019
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
With the Outlaw Country Cruise produced in part by SiriusXM’s Outlaw Country channel, the satellite radio giant stages a number of “SiriusXM Sessions at Sea” over the course of the voyage. On Thursday, American songwriter Elizabeth Cook — and host of Elizabeth Cook’s Apron Strings — sat with New Artist of the Year Grammy nominee Margo Price for a wide-ranging interview. Premiering Thursday, February 7th, on Outlaw Country, the conversation found the two women sharing their experiences in the male-dominated music industry, heaping praise on the work of Bobbie Gentry...
- 2/1/2019
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
For most people, a simple handshake from John Prine could be considered a once-in-a-lifetime kind of gift. But for producer and engineer Matt Ross-Spang, his Prine prize came in the form of something a lot more permanent — and one that requires oil, not vodka and ginger ale, to keep chugging.
“Every day he would drive a different Cadillac to the studio,” says Ross-Spang, sitting at an East Nashville coffee shop and recalling Prine’s The Tree of Forgiveness sessions. Ross-Spang engineered the project alongside producer Dave Cobb, and he’d...
“Every day he would drive a different Cadillac to the studio,” says Ross-Spang, sitting at an East Nashville coffee shop and recalling Prine’s The Tree of Forgiveness sessions. Ross-Spang engineered the project alongside producer Dave Cobb, and he’d...
- 12/17/2018
- by Marissa R. Moss
- Rollingstone.com
Jack White took my phone and locked it in a bag. To be fair, it was actually Yondr, a company that specializes in phone-free experiences, like White’s homecoming concert on Tuesday night at Nashville’s Bridgestone Arena. But the no-technology, no-distractions edict was clearly the famously analog musician’s idea. And a good one, it turns out.
Over four-and-a-half hours, three distinct acts soundtracked a dark arena that, without the glow of mobile devices, was nearly impossible to date. White’s set, guitar-heavy, up-tempo and anthemic, could have been...
Over four-and-a-half hours, three distinct acts soundtracked a dark arena that, without the glow of mobile devices, was nearly impossible to date. White’s set, guitar-heavy, up-tempo and anthemic, could have been...
- 11/21/2018
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
The first car Margo Price ever owned was a Nineties-something silver Saturn that she bought with money she saved from lifeguarding — and promptly wrecked in her parents’ driveway. Rushing home from her boyfriend’s to make midnight curfew, she put it in park and dashed inside. Or thought she did.
“I woke up the next morning and they had it up on a tow truck. I came out in my underwear and T-shirt because I thought it was a bad dream,” she says. “My dad got home from working second...
“I woke up the next morning and they had it up on a tow truck. I came out in my underwear and T-shirt because I thought it was a bad dream,” she says. “My dad got home from working second...
- 10/2/2018
- by Joseph Hudak
- Rollingstone.com
Margo Price’s melancholy sophomore album, All American Made, is rooted in real heartbreak.
The Illinois native dropped out of college in Chicago to move to Nashville, where she totaled her car during her first week in her new city and bounced between numerous odd jobs. “I couldn’t keep a job,” Price, 34, tells People in this week’s issue. “I have a cousin who lives there and she would always hook me up with some job at a hotel or at the mall or whatever, and I was a terrible employee. It was a tough start.”
The singer-songwriter ended...
The Illinois native dropped out of college in Chicago to move to Nashville, where she totaled her car during her first week in her new city and bounced between numerous odd jobs. “I couldn’t keep a job,” Price, 34, tells People in this week’s issue. “I have a cousin who lives there and she would always hook me up with some job at a hotel or at the mall or whatever, and I was a terrible employee. It was a tough start.”
The singer-songwriter ended...
- 1/5/2018
- by Dana Rose Falcone
- PEOPLE.com
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